The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, November 20, 1979-Page 5 Governors criticize Carter for nth Avenue at ibeot761-9700 p ~se enc on O E nation FFlh hae Bw? "We have today in southwest Virginia several thousand coal miners out of work," Dalton said. "The same thing is true in practically all of your coal mining states." DuPont said Carter's efforts to cut oil imports in half by 1985 could prove a national disaster unless other sources were developed. "If it should come to pass that we are not prepared, it could be the most devastating economic blow that the United States has felt in half a generation," du Pont said. "If we cut down on oil imports and don't have our domestic resources built up, there's going to be allocation of petroleum feed stocks to industry, there's going to be unemployment, there's going to be all kinds of tangles that are going to bring the American economy to a halt." The .50 $org$ in! NATIONAL LAMP@@Ns ANIMA starring JOHN U*U?19 BELUS Tues 6:00, 8:00, 10:00 Tues Adults $1.50 til6:30 (or capacity) Wed thru Sun 1:50, 3:50, 6:00, 8:00, 10:00 Wed thru Sun Adults $1.50 til 2:15 (or capacity) The Ann Arbor Film Coopersteiv Presents at Aud. A: $1.50 Tuesday, November 20 A PERFECT COUPLE (Robert Altman, 1979) 7 & 9-AUD. A A comedy-romance about a wealthy young man from a father-dominated Greek-American family who falls in love with a member of a not-terribly- successful rock group. "Like a more melancholy Preston Sturges, (Altman) catches the clown-like sadness beneath the nuttiness of American life."- Jack Kroll, NEWSWEEK. With PAUL DOOLEY and MARTHA HEFLIN as the lovers. Wednesday, Nov. 28: The 4-hour version of Bod Dylan's RENALDO AND CLARA at 5:00 and 9:00 in Aud. A 40 5in SigerSa genb ami tkefE w ta ig -7portraitof hgihsc et Exclusive North American showing of 100 portraits, figure drawings and watercolors by John Singer Sargent. Included are paintings the London Telegraph calls the twelve most beautiful portraits in the world. Among them, Lady Agnew and the notorious Madame X. Witness the glamour, elegance and splendor of the Edwardian Age through Sargent's grand portraits. The Detroit Institute of Arts Now through Dec. 9 ADMISSION: General $2; Students, Seniors $1 Members, Children under 12 with Adults-Free. Hours: Tues. through Sun. 9:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. :l. At' Photos AMERICAN HOSTAGES GREET each other joyfully at the press conference during their captivity. Meanwhile, outside the embassy, demonstrators burned in Tehran held to announce their release. They were separated from each other an American flag as the hostages were being released. More hostages set free (continued from Page 1) James Hughes, Langley AFB, Va.; and Joseph Vincent, New Orleans. THE FIRST hostages released, a woman embassy secretary and two black Marine sergeants, left Tehran this morning for Copenhagen on board a chartered Scandinavian Air Systems (SAS) plane. They were then flown to Frankfurt and taken to the nearby U.S. Air Force hospital at Weisbaden for medical tests. Before leaving the three - Kathy Gross, 22, of Cambridge Springs, Pen- nsylvania, Sergeant William Quarles, 23, of Washington, D.C., and Sergeant Ladell Maples, 23, of Earle, Arkansas - told foreign reporters they were glad to be free. But they said they had developed sympathy for the cause of the students, who took over the embassy on Novem- ber 4 in an attempt to force the United States to return the shah. The State Department could not con- firm release of the second group. HAIRSTYLISTS For Men, Women and Children at Daoseig Sstylists Liberty off State-66&8A29 East U. at South U.-662-0354 Arboriand-971-9975 Maple Village-761-2733 a Carter: Iran trial would break international lawr Op7-CINEMAj- PRESENTS lr ESHES OF THE AFTERNOONIvr A collection of experimental films by the following women filmmakers: MAYA DEREN, MARIE MENCKEN, GERMAINE DULAC, CAROLE SCHNEE- MANN. Selections include MESHES OF THE AFTERNOON; 'AT LAND; RITUAL IN TRANSFIGUREDETIME; HURRY HURRY; GLIMPSE OF THE GARDEN; VARIATIONS ONA THEME OF NUGUCHI; THE SMILING MADAME BENDET and FUSES. (Continued from Page 1) for the release of our hostages. They must be released. What may or may not happen after that is a matter that I will be prepared to deal with after that fact." Officials refused to discuss Iran's allegations of U.S. spying. But some of- ficials said all security documents were destroyed before the Iranian students broke into the embassy basement and took control of the compound. Apart from the cautionary statement, there was no indication any U.S. action is planned if Iran follows through with a threat to put on trial and punish "a cer- tain number of spies" among the cap- tive Americans. v ANGELL HALL 7:00 & 9:00 $1.50 Friday: THEY SHOOT HORSES, DON'T THEY? Sponsored by The Michigan Council for the Arts L Pbliitysponsored by MSA _____________ ENERGY. We can't afford to waste it. TALKIE DOUBLE FEATURE T L 1g I A 'T CINGeE, D .-nni